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AdvertisementBill Gates is a self-described optimist about the future of AI, but the tech still raises a few key concerns for him. Experts have warned AI models can be abused for purposes like carrying out scams or cyberattacks or spreading misinformation , among other things. Besides Gates, other business leaders have also expressed concerns about AI and an interest in more regulation and guardrails on the technology. Many share some of Gates' concerns. Looking more at the present, Gates has said he uses AI in his own life to summarize meetings he attends.
Persons: Bill Gates, , Kara Swisher, Gates, Joe Biden's, Goldman Sachs, HubSpot, — it's, you've, Michael Schwarz, Sam Altman, Microsoft's Organizations: Microsoft, Service, AIs, cybercrime Locations: bioterrorism
Microsoft's chief economist said AI could be dangerous if misused by bad actors. The concerns over AI's dangers come despite Microsoft accelerating the development of AI. AI "will cause real damage" if it falls into the wrong hands, Microsoft's chief economist has said. "I am confident AI will be used by bad actors, and yes it will cause real damage," Schwarz said during the panel in Geneva. During the panel, Schwarz said he believed AI should be regulated, but cautioned against regulation that got in the way of the potential benefits AI holds.
being used by bad actors" than they should about AI productivity outpacing human productivity, Microsoft chief economist Michael Schwarz said at a World Economic Forum event Wednesday. Microsoft first invested $1 billion in OpenAI in 2019, years before the two companies would integrate OpenAI's GPT large language model into Microsoft's Bing search product. Politicians and regulators have expressed growing concern about the potential impact of AI technology as well. Vice President Kamala Harris will meet Thursday with top executives from Anthropic, another AI firm, and Google, Microsoft and OpenAI to discuss responsible AI development, the White House told CNBC Tuesday. "Please remember, breaking is much easier than building," Schwarz noted.
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